No, they won't forget: Adams County residents at the site where deputies gunned down Jack Yantis. |
Residents of Adams County, Idaho, should compel Sheriff Ryan Zollman – by nailing his feet to the floor, if necessary -- to answer this question: Are you willing to tell Donna Yantis to her face that her husband Jack deserved to die?
If Zollman answers that question in the negative, he should
be forced to answer this one: Are you willing to fire the deputies who
perforated Jack Yantis with gunshots, even
though they will be spared criminal prosecution, because they killed an
innocent man?
Assuming that Zollman isn’t willing to do either of the
foregoing, he should candidly admit to the public supposedly served by his
office that their lives are less valuable than those of his deputies; that the
testimony of a local citizen is never to be credited when that citizen accuses
deputies of misconduct; that the personal safety of his deputies is the only
important consideration in any encounter with a member of the public; and that he
is willing to protect the job security of deputies who have exhibited lethal
incompetence even when this means putting the public at avoidable risk.
If he were any part of a man, Zollman would have fired Deputies
Cody Roland and Brian Wood immediately after last November’s fatal shooting. Instead,
he is accusing critics of his department of enlisting in the mythical “war on
police.”
“It’s clear that in the nation, law enforcement, we’re under
attack, and we just have a reason here in Adams County,” simpered
Zollman in a television interview shortly after Idaho Attorney
General Lawrence Wasden made the entirely predictable announcement that Roland
and Wood would not face criminal charges.
Zollman invites the public to pretend that the deputies, not
the man they killed without cause or the prospect of facing accountability, are
the victims, their egos gravely wounded by criticism from the public that has
continued to pay their salaries and – for reasons that defy my understanding --
retains an ingenuous belief in the
legitimacy of their profession.
People who pursue a career in law enforcement rarely expose themselves
to peril, and are often burdened with an overdeveloped capacity for self-pity.
From the moment the Adams County deputies gunned down a rancher in an act of
criminally negligent homicide – after pleading with him to finish a dangerous
task that exceeded their subsidized but inadequate skill-set – Zollman and his
comrades made protection of the killers their highest priority.
To understand how law enforcement administrators would deal
with an incident of this kind in a relatively civilized country, it’s useful to
recall how Haraldur Johannessen, Reykjavik’s Chief of Police, reacted
after his officers fatally shot a man who had been sniping at pedestrians from
an apartment window. That December 2, 2013 episode was the first fatal
police shooting of a suspect by police in Iceland … well, in
the entire history of that country since it achieved independence in 1944.
“Police regret this incident and would like to extend their condolences to the family of the man,” Johannessen said during a press conference following the incident.
“Police regret this incident and would like to extend their condolences to the family of the man,” Johannessen said during a press conference following the incident.
None of the officers involved in the raid regarded what they
did as heroic. While acknowledging that deadly force had to be used to protect
the public, several of the officers – soul-sick over their involvement in
ending an irreplaceable human life – sought grief counseling. Their ability to
see a violent criminal suspect as a fellow human being didn’t detract from
their efficiency and professionalism.
I suspect that this is because police in Iceland, whatever
else can be said about their training and professional conduct, have not been
marinated in the same “No
Hesitation” – “Officer
Safety uber alles” indoctrination
that
is de rigueur for American law enforcement personnel, and that unlike their
American counterparts Icelandic police are not protected by the pernicious
legal fiction called “qualified immunity.”
The US(S)A is a country in which a police
officer who risks his life by using non-lethal tactics to end a violent
confrontation can
be threatened with administrative punishment – or can find himself fired
outright and subject to official retaliation for exposing the abusive behavior
of his former comrades.
That the deputies who slaughtered Jack Yantis were never in
substantial danger of prosecution was made clear by Zollman’s eagerness to
reinstate them to patrol duty within days
of the killing – long before the Attorney General had completed the cynical
charade of an investigation. In late November, just
two weeks after Yantis’s funeral, Zollman told
the Idaho Statesman that the deputies would return “when they tell
me they’re good to go. Some come back quicker, some come back later.”
The only practical consideration, apparently, was the emotional
resilience of the killers. Zollman was prepared to put them back on patrol the
moment they had overcome whatever trivial misgivings they may have had about
killing the next time an opportunity presented itself.
Jack Yantis, obviously, is never coming back. His wife
Donna, who was assaulted on the scene and shackled by the men who had just
executed her husband, did rebound from the heart attack precipitated by the
criminal actions of Zollman’s deputies, but she will never fully recover from
the loss she suffered at their hands.
What happened to Yantis and his family, from Zollman’s
perspective, was a shame. The real tragedy would be if the deputies who gunned
him down and then left him to bleed to death were to lose their entitlements as
members of the punitive caste.
While the Yantis family absorbed the horror of what
Zollman’s deputies had done to them, Zollman – with the help of other local
agencies – assigned
tax-subsidized manpower to guard the homes of the men who killed him. This
was done despite the fact that Wood
was characterized by one of his colleagues as a “sociopath” capable of killing
fellow officers if they were sent to arrest him.
At about that time, Wood
was the subject of an “officer safety” flier, even though the public at
large wasn’t warned of the danger he represented.
From this we can learn
everything necessary to know about the priorities of those who presume to rule
us, but there is additional evidence to consider as well.
“Is he coming back as an Officer in Adams County and when?” asked
Adams County resident Janet Fields of Tami J. Faulhaber, a Senior Investigator
in the Idaho Attorney General’s office, in a May 2 email. The question
referred to Deputy Roland, from whom Fields had received Facebook comments she
considered threatening in nature.
“This seems to be getting worse as your Department allows
the two officers that shot and killed Jack Yantis to walk around beating their
chests,” Fields protested. “The people in this community, my husband and myself
are tired of being afraid of the very people who are supposed to be here to protect
and serve us. I am tired of feeling like I have to have a tape recorder … every
time I go to the grocery store in town or that our CCP [Concealed Carry Permit]
may get us shot by the very people who issued them.”
Officials did take the concerns of local citizens into
account – which is to say, they treated them as threats to the safety of the
men who killed Jack Yantis.
“Paul – we have discussed here in the office a concern that
we have for the safety of the officers when the announcement is made,
regardless of what the decision is,” wrote Carl Ericson, Legal
Counsel for the Idaho Risk Management
Program, in a
July 21 email to Paul Panther of the AG’s office. “There is a legitimate
worry about possible vigilantism and it could pose a risk to the officers if
charges are filed against them and they have not been taken into custody (or
voluntarily surrendered) at the time the decision is announced. On the other
hand, if no charges are being filed, they may want to leave town to protect
themselves prior to the announcement of no charges…. It would be more difficult
if they are given a heads up that no charges are being filed and they then
start broadcasting it to the world before the announcement.”
Roland and Wood, who
have been taking victory laps in the media, are not in danger of being
lynched, and they never were. As noted previously, Roland and Wood were also never
in serious danger of being charged, because this killing – like
every fatal officer-involved shooting – was investigated as an “assault on
law enforcement.”
Rather than seeking to establish probable cause –as he would
in any similar case not involving the State’s costumed enforcers – AG Wasden
used the investigation to build a case against the dead victim.
To conclude that there was no basis for filing criminal
charges against Roland and Wood is, inescapably, the same thing as concluding that Yantis deserved to die. If
Roland and Wood had been acquitted following a trial, the public could
reasonably conclude that the deputies were in the wrong, and that Yantis was an
innocent victim, and that the evidence simply wasn’t adequate to support a
conviction.
Whether or not the deputies had been convicted of a crime (most likely manslaughter), there is a sense in which a trial was necessary to clear the name of their victim. By refusing to allow the prosecution to proceed, however, Wasden effectively convicted Jack Yantis of attempting, or at least threatening, to murder Deputies Roland and Wood–and in doing so he contradicts abundant evidence that should have been examined by a jury of Adams County citizens.
Whether or not the deputies had been convicted of a crime (most likely manslaughter), there is a sense in which a trial was necessary to clear the name of their victim. By refusing to allow the prosecution to proceed, however, Wasden effectively convicted Jack Yantis of attempting, or at least threatening, to murder Deputies Roland and Wood–and in doing so he contradicts abundant evidence that should have been examined by a jury of Adams County citizens.
Jack Yantis must
have been a criminal, because otherwise the deputies wouldn’t have killed him. That is Sheriff Zollman’s position on the
issue. Is he willing to say this to Donna Yantis?
This week's Freedom Zealot Podcast: Yes, the government has a "list"; what have you done to earn a place of honor therein?
Dum spiro, pugno!
This week's Freedom Zealot Podcast: Yes, the government has a "list"; what have you done to earn a place of honor therein?
Dum spiro, pugno!
when law enforcement people act as they have in this case, apparently all to common all over this nation, they foster the attitude that they claim makes them vulnerable.
ReplyDeletein the end, what we are witnessing is the official stamp of approval of murder being given by the state. how will this 'protection' translate in practice on the roads of Adams County? look for wood and roland (small letters intended) to be featured again at some point, just as they had been in the past, before they transitioned to murder.
the bigger question: when the state sanctions murder by its hirelings, how safe are any of us? i am afraid a few poor souls will get to endure the answer to this question in the future in Adams County as the Sheriff's Sociopathic Troupe has now been given sanction to do as they please, including murder.
We the people are right and free to defend our lives from any threat, badge or not!
ReplyDeleteIf you feel 'in fear for your life' you DO have the right to shoot back!
And we hope people start doing this.
We are nobody's property, WE ARE THE MASTERS and OWNERS of our nation, ALL others simply work for us as EMPLOYEES with NO rights!
Justice for Jack, will now need to come from the citizens of Adams county. That starts with a newly elected sheriff during the next election. New county commissioner, seemingly they have been all too silent for all too long. Sweep the trash out of office, Justice for Jack, style. Fact is, if this does not happen, shame on the citizen of Adams county when more bad things happen to them. Because no one will care if people don't stand up for themselves and vote out the bums.
ReplyDeleteWill, I would say this was NOT manslaughter, it was murder in the first. The psychotic Wood was itching for a fight, his blood-lust overwhelming. In my opinion, he planned this from the beginning. He is one sick SOB and whoever thought giving him a badge and a gun was a good idea are are stupid, sick and twisted as he is. The other coward, Roland, went along with it because the blue wall of silence. Both of them are disgusting pieces of human detritus.
ReplyDeleteIt is sickening that these non thinking officers are allowed to be on the force to begin with, much less hang on to their jobs after they show such poor judgement and kill this innocent man.
ReplyDeleteThe problem with this whitewash, this protection of the murderers within the ranks of police, is that people will come to the conclusion they are all accessories to this murder. So when the retribution finally comes, it will not be focused only on the murderers. They made their bed, and soon they will all get to sleep in it.
ReplyDeleteWhat is the most popular caliber for a bolt-action elk rifle in Idaho these days?
ReplyDeleteAnd what's the "working" range for such a rifle, with decent sights?
There are few elk left in Idaho these days. But before the federal forced 3 stated to have the Canadian Gray Wolf, 308. 06, 300 Win mag. I don't believe ther was one favorite, more a personal choice.
ReplyDelete